Today we have a Guest Blog by Caitlin Smith.
If you’re looking to go it on your own, embrace your entrepreneurial spirit and start your own business you may need a little help in the funding department to get you off the ground. If you have solid ideas and a great business plan, this may not be a problem, but if you’ve never gone about looking for investors the process can seem a bit daunting, especially since times are tough all over. Here are some helpful tips to make finding funding a little less stressful.
- Do some research. Ask around, look on the net, and see who some likely candidates to support your business are and who will be able to provide you with the requisite capital to get going.
- Use the web. There are numerous sites out there that are dedicated to hooking up investors with entrepreneurs. Take advantage of them.
- Attend forums and conferences. One way to find investors is to go where they are, including conferences for venture capital and investment. It might cost you a bit, but you’ll get the chance to pitch your business to a wide range of people.
- Use your existing connections. You may already know people who can put you in touch with investors looking for a viable business venture. Don’t be afraid to ask friends, family and former coworkers.
- Find those with similar interests. If your business is designed around creating new tools for doctors then why not look to wealthy practices or doctors as sources of funding? Many may be interested not only in your business but the potential benefit to their own work as well.
- Inquire with business retirees. Just because someone has left the 9-5 grind doesn’t mean they’re ready to call it quits on business altogether. You may find former entrepreneurs and execs who will be excited by the prospect of investing in a new idea.
- Find a partner. Unless you’re dead-set on going it alone, finding a partner can be a godsend for a fledgling business. You may bring one asset to the table while you partner can bring another. Together you may find you have enough to get things going.
- Invest your own money. If you’ve got the cash to spare and the confidence in your success why not invest in your own company? Whether it pans out or fizzles you’ll only be accountable to yourself.
- Get a great team. With an efficient and intelligent management team, your business will have a better chance of succeeding and attracting the kind of investment you’re looking fot.
- Get competitive. Try submitting your business plan to websites to get feedback and compete for investor attention. It might be hard work, but it could pay off big time in the end.
Caitlin Smith who writes about top accredited online degrees. She welcomes your feedback at CaitlinSmith1117 at gmail.com
The amazing Tom McKaskill has made his latest book, Invest to Exit – a pragmatic strategy for angel and venture capital investors, available free for download.
New Zealand startups have typically followed a high-growth strategy, but Tom McKaskill argues that in many cases a strategy to building for a strategic trade sale is more appropriate.
Tom suggests:
“If we plan the exit from the outset, the manner in which the business is developed continually keeps the exit in mind and this ensures that we don’t veer off track in terms of meeting our major objective. Some Angels and VC investors do this but they are in the minority.
Now lets get even more radical. Why don’t we change our investment criteria to only focus on investments where we have a high probability of a premium exit. In order to do this, we have to have a very good idea of what creates premium exit conditions, that is, what do we have to do to set up the conditions where a premium exit is highly likely, whether this be an IPO or a trade sale? What would we have to do to make this happen?
Tom spoke very convincingly on this topic at last year’s Angel Association conference.
INVEST to EXIT is a highly pragmatic strategy for Angel and Venture Capital investors which focuses the investment, business development and harvest activities on strategic value. Investment decisions are targeted towards those ventures which can create a strategic buyer exit. The period of investment is often shorter, operational execution risks are lower and return on investment is higher.
What people are saying about the book:
“Tom McKaskill’s insights into the ‘art of the exit’ provide a great roadmap for all Angel and Venture Capital investors. In a misguided investment world that relies too heavily on IPOs, mega-exits and too much quantitative analysis, McKaskill has taken an enlightened and straightforward approach to a topic that should be foremost on startup investors’ minds.”
Joe Platnick, Pasadena Angels, USA
“For the professional Angel and Venture Capital investor, Invest to Exit is the first book to succinctly capture the importance of aligning the combined interests of inves- tor, management and shareholder when making the investment to produce an optimum result on exit regardless of underlying economic conditions. Commencing exit plan- ning much earlier in a company’s development, combined with planning and then flawless execution will always produce an outcome better than starting later and hop- ing a buyer “will be just around the corner”.
Dr. McKaskill has captured the essence of the issue, providing examples which clearly highlight the challenges and issues faced along the way.
This is compelling reading for investor and companies alike as they work collabora- tively to achieve a superior result when they sell.”
Greg Sitters, Sparkbox Investments Limited, New Zealand
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
1 Begin with the end in mind
2 High growth – high risk
3 Spot the IPO
4 Financial vs strategic exits
5 Threats and opportunities
6 Identifying strategic value
7 Finding strategic buyers
8 Enabling the opportunity
9 Reducing risks to the buyer
10 Setting up the exit deal
11 Evaluating potential investments
12 Executing the exit strategy
13 Structuring the trade sale deal
14 Selecting professional advisors
15 Conclusion – impatient capital
Download it now – it may be the most valuable thing you’ve read in a long time.